Some of speeches are scheduled to focus on the Benghazi, Libya, terrorist attack, former President Bill Clinton's sexual past and immigration.

On July 12, POLITICO reported that Pastor Mark Burns will also speak at the convention.

Burns, an African-American evangelical from South Carolina, told the magazine, "I’d like to talk to the heart of Mr. Trump, the heart that he has for this country," adding "how it’s so important for the leader of our nation to be a voice for all Americans. Being a leader that’s not going to pander to a particular group. We want to bring people together — really deal with the issues without looking at all the polling."

According to some recently released NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist polls, Trump is at 0 percent among black voters in Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Clinton led Trump in Ohio by 88 to 0 percent among African Americans, and 91 to 0 percent in Pennsylvania.

Burns told POLITICO:

I don’t think any one person can do it. But I think whoever is the leader of the free world and the biggest mouthpiece for America, they have a great job in influencing the country. I believe that Donald Trump could bring people together. ... We can bring people together if we focus on the issues that matter, like jobs. It has nothing to do with color. It has everything to with Americans as a whole.